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Correlative light electron ion microscopy reveals in vivo localisation of bedaquiline in Mycobacterium tuberculosis–infected lungs

Antony Fearns, Daniel J. Greenwood, Angela Rodgers, Haibo Jiang, Maximiliano G. Gutiérrez

2020PLoS Biology28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Correlative light, electron, and ion microscopy (CLEIM) offers huge potential to track the intracellular fate of antibiotics, with organelle-level resolution. However, a correlative approach that enables subcellular antibiotic visualisation in pathogen-infected tissue is lacking. Here, we developed correlative light, electron, and ion microscopy in tissue (CLEIMiT) and used it to identify the cell type-specific accumulation of an antibiotic in lung lesions of mice infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Using CLEIMiT, we found that the anti-tuberculosis (TB) drug bedaquiline (BDQ) is localised not only in foamy macrophages in the lungs during infection but also accumulate in polymorphonuclear (PMN) cells.

Topics & Concepts

BedaquilineBiologyMycobacterium tuberculosisCorrelativeTuberculosisElectron microscopeMicrobiologyOrganelleAntibioticsUltrastructureMicroscopyPathologyCell biologyAnatomyMedicineOpticsPhysicsPhilosophyLinguisticsBacterial Identification and Susceptibility TestingMycobacterium research and diagnosisAdvanced Electron Microscopy Techniques and Applications
Correlative light electron ion microscopy reveals in vivo localisation of bedaquiline in Mycobacterium tuberculosis–infected lungs | Litcius